My Father Was Killed by a Computer, Says 7-Year-Old Afghan Child

Dr. Hakim

Imal, a 7-year-old Afghan student in the 2nd grade, came to visit us in Kabul.

As Imal grew up, he kept asking his mother where his father was. His mother finally told Imal that his father had been killed by a drone when he was still a baby.

If you could see Imal in this video you would want to hug Imal immediately.

If Imal were a white American kid, this tragedy would not have befallen his father. Which American would allow any U.S. citizen to be killed by a foreign drone?

Suppose the UK wanted to hunt "terrorists" in the US, with their drones, and every Tuesday, David Cameron signed a "secret kill list" like Obama does. Drones operated from Waddington Base in the UK fly over US skies to drop bombs on their targets, and the bombs leave a 7-year-old American kid, say, John, fatherless.

John’s father is killed, shattered to charred pieces by a bomb, dropped by a drone, operated by a human, under orders from the Prime Minister /Commander-in-Chief.

"John, we’re sorry that your father happened to be near our 'terrorist’ target.’ He was collateral damage. It was 'worth it’ for the sake of UK national security."

Unfortunately, no US official or military personnel had met with Imal’s widowed mother to apologize.

Raz, Imal’s uncle who brought him to visit us, asked his young nephew, "Will you bring me some marbles to play with?"

Imal was friendly, like any other 7 year old kid. "Yes!" His voice was a trusting one, eager to be a good friend and playmate.

"Do you also play with walnuts? Tell us how you play with walnuts," Raz requests.

"We put them in a line, and flick a walnut to hit other walnuts, like playing with marbles," Imal explains diligently, like he was telling a story we should all be interested in.

"Besides beans, what other food do you like?"

"I also like….potatoes…and meat……and….rice!" All of us were smiling with the familiar love of Afghan oiled 'palao’ or 'Qabuli’ rice."

In another Bureau of Investigative Journalism report, "Tracking drone strikes in Afghanistan", (July, 2014),the Bureau states that "nobody systematically publishes insurgent and civilian deaths from drones on a strike-by-strike basis. Neither the US nor UK authorities publishes data on the casualties of their drone operations."

So, we are unable to find out for Imal’s mother if it was a US/UK drone that killed her husband, and who the drone operator was.

If Imal were John, could he or his mother sue David Cameron? Stop the drone? Stop the human drone operator? Disable the computer?

We gave Imal a Borderfree blue scarf, and thanked him for coming.

His eyes were bright and cheerful, taking in the photos on the wall, including a poster of Gandhi and Badshah Khan. Badshah Khan was a Pashtun like Imal, and has been called the Frontier Gandhi for his lifelong struggle for nonviolence.

I have been thinking hard about Imal, about whether anyone would hear him, when few among the elites who declare wars and order drone strikes seem to have heard the now famous Malala, not even President Obama.

"I wish to tell the world, 'We don’t want war. Don’t fight!’"

Dr. Hakim is a medical doctor from Singapore who has done humanitarian and social enterprise work in Afghanistan for the past 9 years, including being a friend and mentor to the Afghan Peace Volunteers, an inter-ethnic group of young Afghans dedicated to building nonviolent alternatives to war. He is the 2012 recipient of the International Pfeffer Peace Prize.

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